Wole Soyinka, Anthony Enahoro, Bola Ahmed Tinubu, and a number of opponents of the Abacha despotism, voted with their feet, while others like Gani Fawehinmi, Femi Falana, Olisa Agbakoba, sustained pressure on that regime from within.
According to Rogers, the instruction to him and his colleagues from their bosses, was that those on the hit list, were enemies of Nigeria who wanted to break up the country. Rogers opined during his appearance at the Human Rights Violations Commission hearing, that Jibril Bala Yakubu, an army colonel in the Abacha government, was one of his bosses on the project to dispense with enemies of that milieu. Rogers said they were regularly assured, that they were heroes who were contributing to the sustenance of the oneness and unity of the country and indeed, to national stability.
Sergeant Habila Barnabas Mshelia, at the last check, is consigned to a wheelchair because of a life threatening accident he was involved in years back. He is also reported to have become a new born Christian. In recent weeks and months, however, there has been something of a resurgence of Rogers-style killings, in parts of the country, with specific reference to the South East. From Imo to Enugu to Anambra, reports of brutal murders in the full view of cities and communities, in broad daylight, have become a recurring decimal, reminding us of those dreaded Abacha days. Ahmed Gulak, a former adviser to former President Goodluck Jonathan, was on Sunday May 30, 2021, shot dead on his way from Owerri the Imo State capital, to catch a flight at the Owerri airport. He was reportedly ambushed around Umueze Obiangwu, in Ngor-Okpala local government area, en route the airport. Reports indicate Gulak was asked out of his car, questioned about his identity and shot at point blank range.
Barely 24 hours after Gulak, a retired High Court, Stanley Nnaji, was double-crossed by gunmen in Enugu, capital of Enugu State and shot dead. He was dragged out of his Mercedes Benz SUV, beside the Enugu Diagnostics Centre right in the Enugu city centre and shot several times. There were insinuations that Nnaji in 2006, gave an order to the Inspector General of Police at the time, Tafa Balogun, to remove Chris Ngige, who was governor of Anambra State at the time, from office. Chris Uba, a stalwart of the Peoples’ Democratic Party, PDP like Ngige, presented a document signed by Ngige, before the Anambra State gubernatorial polls of 2003, to quit office after the election. Uba had allegedly sponsored Ngige’s election. And he had gotten Ngige to sign to give up the position thereafter. Following Nnaji’s adjudication on the matter, Ngige was forcefully ejected from office.
On July 7, 2021, Sam Ndubuisi, a professor and chief executive officer of Scientific Equipment Development Institute, SEDI, a parastatal of the Federal Ministry of Science and Technology, was shot dead again on the streets of Enugu. He was returning from office after work on the fateful day, when gunmen took him out in the most gruesome manner, in an incident which consumed his police orderly and traumatised his daughter, who was riding with him. The sports utility vehicle he was in, was riddled with bullets. Three days before this incident, Ifeanyi Okeke, Chief Executive Officer-designate of AutoEase Organisation, was murdered in the presence of his seven year old son, in the same Enugu.
Phillip Udala, billionaire businessman, was on Tuesday July 13, 2021, murdered across the road from Enugu, in Eke-Agu, Idemili North local government area, of Anambra State. Udala, the youthful proprietor of “Udala Football Club, in the state, died in the most bestial manner. The vehicles conveying him, the manager of his club, Godsent Eriobu and three police escorts, were burnt beyond recognition. The South East, suddenly, so sadly suddenly, has metamorphosed into a novel “Wild, Wild East.”
Interestingly, just like Rogers and his affiliates never took a pin from the scenes of the crimes they committed, there have been no reports of theft from any of those that were murdered in recent weeks. Which means the killings were premeditated.
So what could be the motivation?
While the killings masterminded by agents of the Abacha government were overtly political, the reasons for the recent killings in the South East, remain a riddle. No arrests have been made by the security agencies thus far, in any of the instances highlighted above, thus for now. There are no leads to any of the murders. The motive for each incident remains a matter of speculation and conjecture in public discourse. Why would anyone in Imo State, want to annihilate an Ahmed Gulak, who hailed from faraway Adamawa State? What offence would a former professor at the Enugu State University of Technology, ESUT, Samuel Ndubuisi, Managing Director of an innocuous agency under the Federal Ministry of Science and Technology, have committed against anyone, from his otherwise obscure parastatal? Why would Phillip Udala, a young entrepreneur who was reinvesting into his home base, having established a football club among other investments, be so unimaginably barbecued on a sunny afternoon in his own state?
The security conundrum in the South East at this time, requires the most imaginative of investigative skills from our security agencies. That these killings occur in the full glare of people in built up parts of the various states which are usually better policed than other areas, is a matter for serious interrogation. What happened to the intra-city and inter-state patrols by the police? What has become of information sharing between security operatives, between local governments, and between states? Is it that states in the South East and elsewhere in the country are understaffed? Is it a question of inadequacy of vehicles or equipment? Is it a matter of lack of motivation? Is the police in short supply of quality manpower in the mould of Abba Kyari, the super-cop with the feared reputation of an effective crime buster? Is the police high command identifying and grooming young crime fighters within its ranks to take up the challenge of delivering a perspicacious and efficient police to address the dynamics of our security conundrum. The trend we have witnessed especially from the South East in recent times must not be allowed to persist.
Answers to some of these posers may lie in the patronising attention the federal government has accorded the police, over the years. A copy of the 2021 Supplementary Budget recently submitted to the National Assembly by President Muhammadu Buhari, for instance, clearly demonstrates how grossly underfunded the Nigeria Police is. Whereas the supplementary request seeks N239 Billion for the Nigeria Air Force, the Ministry of Police Affairs is to get N8.5 Billion. Police Formations and Command are to receive N22.5 Billion. Put together, both the Police Affairs Ministry and the Nigeria Police Force, NPF, are to get a total of N31 Billion. The Army according to the same document, is to receive N207 Billion, while the Nigerian Navy will get N157 Billion.
With this manner of miserly, measly and condescending fiscal provision to the Police, the force cannot conjure magic or miracles in crime prevention and fighting. Yet, we must place on record, that much as they are not acknowledged, police personnel from various units in the Force, notably the “Counter Terrorism Unit,” CTU and the “Mobile Police Force,” popularly known as *Mopol,* are also on the frontlines, augmenting the efforts of the military. This should recommend the Police Force, for commensurate funding and encouragement, like the military Services.
As at January 2018, the personnel strength of the Force was over 300,000. There were 12 zones; 37 state commands including the federal capital territory, FCT; 128 area commands; 1,388 divisional commands; 1,579 police stations and 3,756 police posts. Three years down the line, these figures have skyrocketed with at least half a dozen more zonal commands joining the statistics. The number of vehicles in the fleet of the Police as at 2018, was 11,191, while the Force also had 3,115 motorcycles. They need to be fuelled and maintained.
A senior police officer once recalled his altercation with a Commissioner of Police, CP, who was his immediate superior, over operational matters. The said officer had advised the CP, that managing the territory under their jurisdiction, will be improved, if broken down vehicles in the command were repaired and overhauled, to facilitate the operational mobility of the police personnel, under their command. Some of the automobiles simply required tyres, fuel pumps, radiators and similar minor components. He also suggested that the daily allowances of men on surveillance and patrol duties, should be paid to boost the morale of the men.
To the chagrin of this officer who was a Deputy Commissioner of Police, DCP, at the time, the CP countered and said: “My primary obligation here is to Force Headquarters. And they know what I’m doing here.” The DCP backed down and even sought a transfer from that command to forestall further clashes with his boss. But the CP covertly confirmed suspicions in the public domain, about untoward practices in the Force, which constitute a major clog in the wheels of efficiency in the Service.
It should come to us all as a surprise, that senior police officers promoted to the ranks of Assistant Inspector General, AIG and Commissioner of Police, CP, in the last one year, have no official vehicles. Many of such officers ride to work in their personal cars, while some of them heading zones and state commands, simply commandeer police pick-up vans and convert to official use. There are indications that following the appointment of the incumbent Inspector General of Police, IGP, Usman Alkali Baba, orders might have been placed for vehicles of various categories for allocation to senior officers, to enhance their productivity. Former police IGP, Ibrahim Kpotun Idris told Members of the House of Representatives Committee on Police Affairs at a meeting with the parliamentarians in January 2018, that the Force will need to be infused with a minimum of N1Trillion per year, over a period of time to enable it deliver on its core mandate of securing lives and property.
The minimum expectation of Nigerians is that its police and sister security services, should ensure that people can sleep with two eyes closed, go to work and return home safe, drive leisurely to visit family and friends and be able to return home in one piece. They should be able to shop, stop and have a drink or buy a snack, and return safe and sound to their abodes. They should be able to go to their farms without being molested by herdsmen and their cattle rummaging through their farmsteads, even while they are at the mercy of the gun-wielding marauders. They should be able to drive to the next town or community, without the fear of encountering bandits, or becoming objects of ransome bargain in the hands of unscrupulous kidnappers.
Source: Tunde Olusunle Ph.D, The Guardian
If you missed part 1 of this essay, read it here: Gun smoke from the east (1), By Tunde Olusunle